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Ezra Pound, Wyndham Lewis, and Radical Modernism

Autor Vincent Sherry
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 mai 1993
This book examines the relation between the aesthetic convictions and political opinions of the Anglo-American modernists, focusing on the collaboration of Ezra Pound and Wyndham Lewis. In the years before World War I, Pound and Lewis were the forces behind the Vorticist movement, and edited the avant-garde journal "Blast". Sherry's book asks: how do we account for their simultaneous development of highly experimental forms in verse, prose, and paint, and their parallel movements in later years toward the German and Italian parties of European fascism? Making use of research on European writers (e.g. Henri Bergson José Ortega y Gasset, and Georges Sorel) on Modernism, and proposes an understanding of ideology as a force in the literary imagination.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780195076936
ISBN-10: 0195076931
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: halftones
Dimensiuni: 160 x 241 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Vincent Sherry has the gift of never writing an uninteresting page in Pound, Lewis, and Radical Modernism (Oxford). It is impossible in a brief note to capture the richness of this lucidly, gracefully written book, which, among other things, is surely the most thorough and original study of the influence of Wyndham Lewis on Pound.
[An] admirably clear and direct study . . . Sherry's analysis of the Actaeon persona in Canto IV, "the hero manque of Pound's visionary capacity," and particularly his analysis of Canto VII, are illuminating criticism. . . a perceptive appreciation of the way Lewis's handling of these issues reveals a greater critical intelligence than Pound's. . . . Radical Modernism is distinguished not only by a sophisticated understanding of a neglected strain of modernist theory but also by careful scholarship that draws on important unpublished material. But the book's chief distinction is its challenging, and sometimes radically new, readings of Lewis's fiction and Pound's poetry.
Sherry has made Pound new by insisting on those of his convictions which are hardly even recognizable as such; it is not just that most readers today would not shared them, but that the very issues themselves have sometimes become irrelevant, been forgotten, or have entered discourses so different from those in which Pound addressed them that we no longer see the relation.